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Published on Friday 03 May 2024

The Coast with the Most has got greener with two brand new pedal assist e-cargo vehicles carrying out essential tasks like restocking catering outlets and replenishing washroom facilities along beaches in Poole and Bournemouth.

These eco-friendly alternatives replace diesel vans and operate along the seafront between Shore Road and Southbourne. They are distinctively branded with environmental messaging.

With pedal power, and batteries that can be charged overnight providing a range of 65 km (40 miles), the bikes will make a valuable contribution to improving air quality in the area.

Thanks to investment from the Government Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs’ (DEFRA) Air Quality Fund, BCP Council successfully secured £120,000 to invest in air quality improvement projects, which included an e-cargo vehicle scheme to support council seafront operations with a reduced emission fleet, work on our Schools Clean Air project, and an animated film.

Richard Pincroft, Head of Transport and Sustainable Travel at BCP Council, said: We’re delighted to have secured funding to invest in these new e-cargo vehicles.

“It’s all part of our ongoing commitment to improve air quality, reduce congestion, and encourage eco-friendly, sustainable transport for both work and leisure purposes.”

Several people stood beside the new vehicles
Photograph (left to right): Andrew Wood, catering manager at BCP Council, Joseph McMullen,Law Lecturer at Bournemouth University, Alain Simons, Senior Lecturer in Games Technology Programming at Bournemouth University, Richard Wintrip, Transport Policy Team Leader at BCP Council, Jamie, Front of House Host at BCP Council, and Ian Selby, Senior Travel Planning Officer at BCP Council. They are stood in front of and beside two of the brand new e-cargo vehicles.

Jose Melone, Catering Supervisor at BCP Council, added: “I really enjoy using these e-cargo vehicles along the seafront. They’re a positive conversation starter with people enjoying the beach, and they also make the environment much cleaner and more pleasant.”

In addition to the e-cargo vehicle investment, the Defra Air Quality grant is funding a collaborative project between BCP Council and Bournemouth University academics, with help from students, to develop an educational animation about ‘the air we breathe’.

The short film aims to improve awareness about the causes of air pollution and will inform the family audience of small changes visitors and residents can take to help improve air quality.

The animation will be showcased at several locations along the seafront to promote ways people can reduce air pollution both by the sea and wherever they call home.

Alain Simons, Senior Lecturer in Games Technology Programming at Bournemouth University, said: “The animation we’ve produced has given students a fantastic opportunity to work on a client project to a brief, and we’re looking forward to seeing it used in conjunction with other information on air quality that may make a difference to our environment.”

The animation can be found at: https://youtu.be/LAb8WaoCzw0.

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